President Donald Trump posted threats against Colombia on his social media platform on Sunday after two U.S. military repatriation flights were prevented from landing.
N.Y., voiced her concerns about tariffs on Colombian imports that Trump has proposed, claiming they would hurt Americans.
The U.S. will not impose sanctions and tariffs on Colombia after the South American nation agreed to accept deported migrants from the United States, the White House press secretary said in a statement late on Sunday.
Hours after threatening punitive tariffs, the White House said Colombia agreed to accept deported migrants and lifted the threat of new levies.
President Donald Trump is issuing tariffs on Colombia after two repatriation flights of undocumented migrants were not allowed to land in Colombia, according to a post on Truth Social from the president.
But there are risks too - coffee prices could rise and nations may be less willing to stop the flow of migrants north.
The threat follows the South American country’s decision to block U.S. planes transporting migrants back home.
Gustavo Petro said the United States should not treat Colombian migrants as criminals and that he had already turned away U.S. military flights carrying deportees.
Colombia and the US are engaged in a heated trade dispute with tariffs on each other's goods. Watch this report for more details!
Oklahoma bill allowing local, state police to deport undocumented residents gets new attention She made the look her own with some Jenny Humphrey-coded additions.
Indian stock markets witnessed a sharp decline during opening on Monday as US President Trump imposed trade tariff on Columbia which dampened investor sentiment. The Nifty 50 index opened at 22,940.15,